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      Microstructure competences and grammatical errors of Danish‐speaking children with developmental language disorder when telling and retelling narratives and engaging in spontaneous language

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          Abstract

          Background

          Research on the grammatical characteristics of children with developmental language disorder (DLD) across languages has challenged accounts about the nature of DLD. Studies of the characteristics of DLD in different languages can reveal which components of DLD emerge irrespective of language and which components are language specific.

          Aims

          To examine the grammatical characteristics of children with DLD acquiring Danish (microstructure and error types) in order to contribute to research on language‐general and language‐specific characteristics of DLD.

          Methods & Procedures

          Language samples from two telling narratives, one retelling narrative and one session of semi‐spontaneous talk were collected from 39 Danish‐speaking children aged 5;0–8;6, comprising one group of children with DLD ( n = 15) and two control groups (age‐ and language‐matched: n = 15 and = 9, respectively). The data were analysed with reference to microstructure and grammatical errors. The DLD children's performance was compared with that of their peers with typical language development (AM) and to that of a younger group matched on language comprehension (LM). Task effects were also analysed.

          Outcomes & Results

          A significant group difference in microstructure was present in the results for mean length of utterance (MLU), where the AM group had significant higher MLU compared with the DLD group. Two variables clearly distinguished DLD children from both AM and LM children in terms of errors, namely word order errors and omission errors. The analysis of grammatical errors also revealed that the most salient challenges for Danish‐speaking children with DLD were not clearly morphological in nature. Although the children with DLD, as expected, made more morphological errors compared with the AM group, they did not produce more errors compared with the LM group. Task effects were present for some but not all results.

          Conclusions & Implications

          This research emphasizes the importance of cross‐linguistic comparisons of the linguistic error profiles in the elicited language of children with DLD and the importance of considering the methodological context when analysing the grammatical language abilities of children with DLD. The results are relevant for clinicians and for developing screening tools.

          WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS
          What is already known on this subject

          • DLD is characterized by challenges in producing and comprehending language. Ample research is available on English‐speaking children with DLD, and which has reported on challenges acquiring morphology. Studies of children with DLD acquiring other languages than English show challenges related to specific grammatical features of the respective language.

          What this study adds to the existing knowledge

          • This study is the first to investigate microstructure abilities and grammatical errors produced by Danish‐speaking children with DLD and using different language samples (narrative telling, narrative retelling and spontaneous language). It enhances our knowledge about DLD in Scandinavian languages and cross‐linguistically and reinforces cross‐linguistic findings that grammatical and structural challenges in language acquisition for children with DLD might not be reducible exclusively to morphology. While some components of DLD children's language challenges may appear universal and be attributed to overarching factors other components seem more specific to the structure of the target language. Results from this study additionally draw attention to the importance of considering contextual constraints when investigating productive grammatical abilities in children with DLD.

          What are the practical and clinical implications of this work?

          • More detailed analysis of grammatical error types seen in children with DLD acquiring languages other than English and of individual differences contribute to clinical advancement in the field. A better insight into grammatical difficulties of Danish‐speaking children with DLD may contribute to improved assessment procedures and planning of therapy for children with DLD.

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          Most cited references64

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          Phase 2 of CATALISE: a multinational and multidisciplinary Delphi consensus study of problems with language development: Terminology

          Background Lack of agreement about criteria and terminology for children's language problems affects access to services as well as hindering research and practice. We report the second phase of a study using an online Delphi method to address these issues. In the first phase, we focused on criteria for language disorder. Here we consider terminology. Methods The Delphi method is an iterative process in which an initial set of statements is rated by a panel of experts, who then have the opportunity to view anonymised ratings from other panel members. On this basis they can either revise their views or make a case for their position. The statements are then revised based on panel feedback, and again rated by and commented on by the panel. In this study, feedback from a second round was used to prepare a final set of statements in narrative form. The panel included 57 individuals representing a range of professions and nationalities. Results We achieved at least 78% agreement for 19 of 21 statements within two rounds of ratings. These were collapsed into 12 statements for the final consensus reported here. The term ‘Language Disorder’ is recommended to refer to a profile of difficulties that causes functional impairment in everyday life and is associated with poor prognosis. The term, ‘Developmental Language Disorder’ (DLD) was endorsed for use when the language disorder was not associated with a known biomedical aetiology. It was also agreed that (a) presence of risk factors (neurobiological or environmental) does not preclude a diagnosis of DLD, (b) DLD can co‐occur with other neurodevelopmental disorders (e.g. ADHD) and (c) DLD does not require a mismatch between verbal and nonverbal ability. Conclusions This Delphi exercise highlights reasons for disagreements about terminology for language disorders and proposes standard definitions and nomenclature.
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            Toward tense as a clinical marker of specific language impairment in English-speaking children.

            A critical clinical issue is the identification of a clinical marker, a linguistic form or principle that can be shown to be characteristic of children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI). In this paper we evaluate, as candidate clinical markers, a set of morphemes that mark Tense. In English, this includes -s third person singular, -ed regular past, BE, and DO. According to the Extended Optional Infinitive Account (EOI) of Rice, Wexler, and Cleave (1995), this set of morphemes is likely to appear optionally in the grammars of children with SLI at a rate lower than the optionality evident in younger controls. Three groups of preschool children participated: 37 children with SLI, and two control groups, one of 40 MLU-equivalent children and another of 45 age-equivalent children. Three kinds of evidence support the conclusion that a set of morphemes that marks Tense can be considered a clinical marker: (a) low levels of accuracy for the target morphemes for the SLI group relative to either of the two control groups; (b) affectedness for the set of morphemes defined by the linguistic function of Tense, but not for morphemes unrelated to Tense; and (c) a bimodal distribution for Tense-marking morphemes relative to age peers, in which the typical children are at essentially adult levels of the grammar, whereas children in the SLI group were at low (i.e., non-adultlike) levels of performance. The clinical symptoms are evident in omissions of surface forms. Errors of subject-verb agreement and syntactic misuses are rare, showing that, as predicted, children in an EOI stage who are likely to mark Tense optionally at the same time know a great deal about the grammatical properties of finiteness and agreement in the adult grammar. The findings are discussed in terms of alternative accounts of the grammatical limitations of children with SLI and implications for clinical identification.
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              General language performance measures in spoken and written narrative and expository discourse of school-age children with language learning disabilities.

              Language performance in naturalistic contexts can be characterized by general measures of productivity, fluency, lexical diversity, and grammatical complexity and accuracy. The use of such measures as indices of language impairment in older children is open to questions of method and interpretation. This study evaluated the extent to which 10 general language performance measures (GLPM) differentiated school-age children with language learning disabilities (LLD) from chronological-age (CA) and language-age (LA) peers. Children produced both spoken and written summaries of two educational videotapes that provided models of either narrative or expository (informational) discourse. Productivity measures, including total T-units, total words, and words per minute, were significantly lower for children with LLD than for CA children. Fluency (percent T-units with mazes) and lexical diversity (number of different words) measures were similar for all children. Grammatical complexity as measured by words per T-unit was significantly lower for LLD children. However, there was no difference among groups for clauses per T-unit. The only measure that distinguished children with LLD from both CA and LA peers was the extent of grammatical error. Effects of discourse genre and modality were consistent across groups. Compared to narratives, expository summaries were shorter, less fluent (spoken versions), more complex (words per T-unit), and more error prone. Written summaries were shorter and had more errors than spoken versions. For many LLD and LA children, expository writing was exceedingly difficult. Implications for accounts of language impairment in older children are discussed.

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                kristine@id.aau.dk
                Journal
                Int J Lang Commun Disord
                Int J Lang Commun Disord
                10.1111/(ISSN)1460-6984
                JLCD
                International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                1368-2822
                1460-6984
                17 November 2024
                Jan-Feb 2025
                : 60
                : 1 ( doiID: 10.1111/jlcd.v60.1 )
                : e13131
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Institute of Communication and Psychology Teglgaardsplads (Nordkraeft) Aalborg University Aalborg Denmark
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                Kristine Jensen de López, Institute of Communication and Psychology Teglgaardsplads (Nordkraeft), Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark.

                Email: kristine@ 123456id.aau.dk

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5799-8615
                Article
                JLCD13131
                10.1111/1460-6984.13131
                11606381
                39552141
                5a24e693-9643-4183-bfa8-9a36d39d5d8d
                © 2024 The Author(s). International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 18 January 2024
                : 24 October 2024
                Page count
                Figures: 1, Tables: 6, Pages: 17, Words: 11554
                Funding
                Funded by: The Independent Research Fund Denmark
                Award ID: 09‐063957
                Categories
                Research Report
                Research Report
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                January/February 2025
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:6.5.1 mode:remove_FC converted:29.11.2024

                Neurosciences
                developmental language disorder,danish,grammatical errors,narratives
                Neurosciences
                developmental language disorder, danish, grammatical errors, narratives

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